Constituents of the vaccines
A tried and tested platform to develop the vaccine is one of the basic scientific standards, which need to be looked at. As the behaviour of disease is so uncertain and variable, scientists across the world are trying various approaches to develop a safe and effective vaccine. Some of them are mNRA, human adenovirus or chimpanzee adenovirus. Covishield is made from a weakened version of a common cold virus/ adenovirus from chimpanzees. Sputnik V is based on human adenovirus platform, a tried and extensively tested one that was used to successfully fight Ebola in the past. The AstraZeneca vaccine on the contrary is based on chimpanzee adenovirus. Covaxin is developed using Whole-Virion Inactivated Vero Cell derived platform technology.
Efficacy
Vaccine efficacy is defined to measure whether the vaccine is able to prevent the disease significantly or not, and if so, to what extent. Though no vaccine would be 100 per cent effective, clearly, the higher the value of vaccine efficacy, the better is the performance of the potential vaccine. While Bharat Biotech vaccine Covaxin and Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine Covishield continue to provide protection against the coronavirus, there are vaccines globally such as Johnson and Johnson, Sputnik V to name a few that have proven extremely efficient during the third phase of clinical trials. While Sinopharm stands at 79.3 per cent, Johnson and Johnson at 85 per cent and Sinovac at 50.4 per cent. Sputnik V has proved to be 91.6 per cent effective, while also offering full protection from severe cases or hospitalisation due to Covid-19.